Variance and Special Use Permits: Seeking Exceptions to Zoning Rules
Zoning ordinances establish baseline land use rules across American municipalities, but the rigidity of fixed regulations creates a formal mechanism for property owners to seek relief: the variance and the special use permit. These two distinct instruments allow deviation from standard zoning requirements under defined legal criteria, reviewed by local administrative bodies such as zoning boards of appeals. The distinction between them, the procedural pathway each requires, and the evidentiary standards that govern approval decisions are critical reference points for property owners, developers, and land use professionals operating within the US real estate sector.
Definition and scope
A variance is a formal administrative grant that permits a property owner to deviate from a specific dimensional or use requirement in a local zoning ordinance. Variances are governed primarily at the municipal and county level through enabling legislation derived from state zoning authority statutes — most US states have adopted enabling acts modeled on the Standard State Zoning Enabling Act, published by the US Department of Commerce in 1926 and revised in subsequent decades.
Variances fall into two legally distinct categories:
- Area (or dimensional) variance — permits deviation from physical standards such as setback distances, lot coverage ratios, building height limits, or minimum lot size. This category does not change the permitted use of the land.
- Use variance — permits a land use that is otherwise prohibited in the applicable zoning district. Use variances carry a higher evidentiary burden and are prohibited outright in some states, including New York under Town Law § 267-b for certain municipalities.
A special use permit (also termed a conditional use permit or special exception in some jurisdictions) operates differently. It authorizes a land use that the zoning ordinance contemplates as potentially appropriate in a district, but subjects it to discretionary review and site-specific conditions. The use is already verified in the zoning code as allowable by permit — unlike a variance, it does not require proof that strict application of the ordinance would cause hardship.
The American Planning Association (APA) recognizes this operational distinction as foundational to local zoning administration.
How it works
Both instruments follow a structured administrative process. While exact procedures vary by jurisdiction, the standard framework proceeds through the following phases:
- Pre-application review — The applicant consults with the local planning or zoning department to confirm which instrument applies, identify required documentation, and determine filing deadlines.
- Application submission — A formal application is filed with the Zoning Board of Appeals (for variances) or the Planning Commission or Board of Zoning Adjustment (for special use permits), accompanied by site plans, surveys, and supporting statements.
- Public notice — Most state enabling statutes require notice to adjacent property owners, often within 200 to 500 feet of the subject parcel, and publication in a newspaper of general circulation at least 10 days before the hearing.
- Public hearing — The reviewing board conducts a quasi-judicial hearing. Testimony from the applicant, objecting neighbors, and professional witnesses is entered into the record.
- Board deliberation and decision — The board applies the applicable legal standard (hardship for variances; compatibility and conditions for special use permits) and issues a written decision.
- Conditions and compliance — Special use permits routinely carry binding conditions attached to the approval, such as landscaping buffers, traffic management measures, or operational hour restrictions.
- Appeals — Adverse decisions are typically appealable to a state court of record. In most jurisdictions, judicial review is limited to whether the board acted within its authority and whether the decision is supported by substantial evidence.
For variances, the controlling legal standard — as articulated in the landmark New York case Otto v. Steinhilber (282 N.Y. 71, 1939) and widely adopted in other states — requires the applicant to demonstrate that literal enforcement of the zoning ordinance would result in practical difficulty or unnecessary hardship not shared generally by other properties in the district. Self-created hardship is not a qualifying basis in the majority of jurisdictions.
Detailed property providers for a given area often reflect the zoning classifications and special use designations already attached to parcels.
Common scenarios
Variance and special use permit applications arise across a consistent set of land use circumstances:
- Residential setback variances — A homeowner seeks to build an addition that would encroach on a rear or side yard setback requirement, typically by 2 to 10 feet, due to irregular lot geometry.
- Nonconforming lot variances — Lots platted before a zoning ordinance's adoption may fall below current minimum area or frontage thresholds, requiring a variance before development or reconstruction.
- Home-based business special use permits — Many zoning ordinances permit home occupations by special exception, subject to conditions limiting customer visits, signage, and employee presence.
- Religious institutions and schools — Under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (42 U.S.C. § 2000cc), local governments face a heightened standard when applying zoning restrictions to religious assembly uses, making special use permit conditions subject to federal scrutiny.
- Drive-through facilities and fuel stations — These uses are frequently verified as conditional uses in commercial districts, subject to traffic, stacking, and safety review.
- Telecommunications towers — The Telecommunications Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104-104) imposes substantive limits on local zoning denials of wireless facility applications, intersecting directly with special use permit procedures.
The scope of this sector is documented further within the property provider network purpose and scope.
Decision boundaries
The boundary between a variance and a special use permit is not always self-evident to applicants, and misclassifying the request causes procedural delays. The operational distinction is doctrinal: a variance grants relief from a rule that causes hardship to a specific parcel; a special use permit grants approval for a use the code already contemplates as conditionally appropriate.
Key decision criteria applied by reviewing boards include:
- Uniqueness of hardship — Variance approvals require that the hardship be particular to the subject parcel, not a general complaint about the ordinance. A hardship shared by all similarly zoned lots supports a legislative amendment, not a variance.
- Absence of self-creation — Hardship created by the applicant's own actions (such as purchasing a substandard lot with knowledge of its dimensions) disqualifies the variance claim in most jurisdictions.
- Consistency with the comprehensive plan — Both variances and special use permits are evaluated against the municipality's adopted comprehensive plan. The how to use this property resource page describes how planning documents structure land use decisions at the local level.
- Community compatibility — Special use permit standards typically require findings that the proposed use will not generate traffic, noise, or visual impacts incompatible with the surrounding district.
- Minimum necessary relief — Variance boards are constrained to grant the minimum deviation required to relieve the hardship, not the maximum deviation requested. Granting a 15-foot setback variance when 5 feet would resolve the hardship constitutes an abuse of discretion under administrative law principles.
Decisions that lack evidentiary support in the record or fail to address required findings are vulnerable to reversal on appeal. The American Planning Association Policy Guide on Variances and state-specific zoning handbooks published by planning agencies provide the interpretive frameworks that local boards apply.